Despite blindness, woman loves life, gives thanks

GREEN BAY, Wis. — For the past 40 years, Pat Boerschinger has
been legally blind. And while she cannot see, her faith in God and devotion to
Mary guide her every step.

Boerschinger was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa, a rare,
inherited degenerative eye disease, in 1978. "It was devastating,"
she said. "When I first lost my eyesight, the doctor told me, 'You're
going blind. There's nothing I can do for you. There's nothing you can do. You
might as well just go home and not cry about it.'

"I cried all the way home," she recalled. "Then I
got home and I thought, 'Who is he to tell me I can't do anything about it?’”

What she did was turn to God and to "Mama Mary."

"I always grew up thinking that our Blessed Mother was my
favorite," she said. "From the time I reached the age of reason, I
always thought that if I had her on my side, I could not go wrong."

So Boerschinger, now 72, turned to Mary for strength. The
devotion likely stems from her upbringing and proximity to what was called
"The Chapel," now the National Shrine of Our Lady of Good Help in
Champion, Wisconsin, where Mary appeared to Adele Brise in 1859.

Boerschinger's great-grandfather, when he was about 7 years old,
escaped the devastating 1871 Peshtigo fire in the forests near Green Bay by
retreating with his family to the shrine.

Born in Green Bay, Boerschinger grew up in Tonet, about two miles
from the shrine. She remembered visiting the shrine as a child for prayer, May
crowning and feast days. She continues to go to the shrine on the feast of the
Assumption and attended Mass there with her husband, Jack, Aug. 15.

Boerschinger met her husband in 1968 and they were married that Dec.
29. The couple operated Jack's Landscape Nursery in Bellevue for 31 years
before selling the business in 1999. They continue to run a smaller nursery
business with the same name, and Pat assists by answering phone calls.

Despite the loss of her eyesight, Boerschinger has continued to
stay active and practice her faith. She volunteered at Relevant Radio for
nearly 11 years, taking telephone pledges during the Catholic radio station's
pledge drives. About twice a year on Fridays, she joins Drew Mariani on the air
to recite the Divine Mercy Chaplet.

She prays the rosary four times a day, dedicating her prayers to
the needs of others. "You know what, there's always something to pray for.
... My prayer list looks like a scroll. I'm sure by now the good Lord and Mama
Mary are very sick of listening to me. That's why I 'walk to Mary' every year.”

Since the annual walking pilgrimage from St. Norbert College in
De Pere to the shrine in Champion began in 2013, Boerschinger has walked the
entire 21-mile distance. Last May, she was honored to help carry the Marian
statue across the Claude Allouez Bridge in De Pere.

"I am planning on doing it next year, too," she said.
"I get a little sore, but who doesn't?" At the end of the walk, she
sits down and drinks a bottle of water. "By the time Mass is over, I feel
fine again. I'm used to walking because I run," she said.

With the assistance of her personal trainer at the YMCA in
Bellevue, Craig Congdon, Boerschinger runs about three miles each Tuesday and
Thursday. The walking and running keep her active, said Boerschinger, which
helps her prayer life.

"I figure that if the good Lord put me down here, and the
reason was that it had something to do with being blind, then I'm going to work
with it and figure it out."

Lucero is news and information manager at The Compass,
newspaper of the Diocese of Green Bay.